rlog(1)


NAME

   rlog - print log messages and other information about RCS files

SYNOPSIS

   rlog [ options ] file ...

DESCRIPTION

   rlog prints information about RCS files.

   Filenames  matching  an  RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others denote
   working files.  Names are paired as explained in ci(1).

   rlog prints the following information for each RCS file: RCS file name,
   working file name, head (i.e., the number of the latest revision on the
   trunk), default branch, access list,  locks,  symbolic  names,  suffix,
   total  number  of revisions, number of revisions selected for printing,
   and descriptive text.  This is followed by  entries  for  the  selected
   revisions  in  reverse  chronological  order for each branch.  For each
   revision, rlog prints revision number, author, date/time, state, number
   of  lines added/deleted (with respect to the previous revision), locker
   of the revision (if any), and log message.  All times are displayed  in
   Coordinated  Universal  Time  (UTC)  by default; this can be overridden
   with -z.  Without  options,  rlog  prints  complete  information.   The
   options below restrict this output.

   -L  Ignore  RCS  files  that  have no locks set.  This is convenient in
       combination with -h, -l, and -R.

   -R  Print only the name of  the  RCS  file.   This  is  convenient  for
       translating a working file name into an RCS file name.

   -h  Print  only  the  RCS  file  name, working file name, head, default
       branch, access list, locks, symbolic names, and suffix.

   -t  Print the same as -h, plus the descriptive text.

   -N  Do not print the symbolic names.

   -b  Print information  about  the  revisions  on  the  default  branch,
       normally the highest branch on the trunk.

   -ddates
       Print  information  about revisions with a checkin date/time in the
       ranges given by the semicolon-separated list of dates.  A range  of
       the  form  d1<d2 or d2>d1 selects the revisions that were deposited
       between d1 and d2 exclusive.  A range of the form <d or d>  selects
       all revisions earlier than d.  A range of the form d< or >d selects
       all revisions dated later than d.  If < or > is followed by =  then
       the  ranges  are  inclusive,  not exclusive.  A range of the form d
       selects the single,  latest  revision  dated  d  or  earlier.   The
       date/time strings d, d1, and d2 are in the free format explained in
       co(1).  Quoting is normally necessary,  especially  for  <  and  >.
       Note that the separator is a semicolon.

   -l[lockers]
       Print information about locked revisions only.  In addition, if the
       comma-separated list lockers of login names is  given,  ignore  all
       locks   other  than  those  held  by  the  lockers.   For  example,
       rlog -L -R -lwft RCS/* prints the name of RCS files locked  by  the
       user wft.

   -r[revisions]
       prints  information  about  revisions  given in the comma-separated
       list revisions of revisions and ranges.  A  range  rev1:rev2  means
       revisions  rev1  to  rev2  on the same branch, :rev means revisions
       from the beginning of the branch up to and including rev, and  rev:
       means  revisions  starting  with  rev  to  the  end  of  the branch
       containing rev.  An argument that is a branch means  all  revisions
       on  that  branch.   A  range of branches means all revisions on the
       branches in that range.  A branch followed by a . means the  latest
       revision  in  that  branch.   A bare -r with no revisions means the
       latest revision on the default branch, normally the trunk.

   -sstates
       prints information about revisions whose state attributes match one
       of the states given in the comma-separated list states.

   -w[logins]
       prints  information  about revisions checked in by users with login
       names appearing in the comma-separated list logins.  If  logins  is
       omitted, the user's login is assumed.

   -q  This  option  has  no  effect;  it is provided for consistency with
       other commands.

   -T  This option has no effect; it is  present  for  compatibility  with
       other RCS commands.

   -V  Print RCS's version number.

   -Vn Emulate RCS version n when generating logs.  See co(1) for more.

   -xsuffixes
       Use suffixes to characterize RCS files.  See ci(1) for details.

   rlog prints the intersection of the revisions selected with the options
   -d, -l, -s, and  -w,  intersected  with  the  union  of  the  revisions
   selected by -b and -r.

   -zzone specifies the date output format, and specifies the default time
          zone for date in the -ddates option.  The zone should be  empty,
          a  numeric  UTC offset, or the special string LT for local time.
          The default is an empty zone, which  uses  the  traditional  RCS
          format  of UTC without any time zone indication and with slashes
          separating the parts of the date; otherwise, times are output in
          ISO  8601  format  with  time  zone indication.  For example, if
          local time is January 11, 1990, 8pm Pacific Standard Time, eight
          hours west of UTC, then the time is output as follows:

                 option    time output
                 -z        1990/01/12 04:00:00        (default)
                 -zLT      1990-01-11 20:00:00-08
                 -z+05:30  1990-01-12 09:30:00+05:30

EXAMPLES

       rlog  -L  -R  RCS/*
       rlog  -L  -h  RCS/*
       rlog  -L  -l  RCS/*
       rlog  RCS/*

   The first command prints the names of all RCS files in the subdirectory
   RCS that have locks.  The second command prints the  headers  of  those
   files,  and  the  third prints the headers plus the log messages of the
   locked revisions.  The last command prints complete information.

ENVIRONMENT

   RCSINIT
          Options prepended to the argument list, separated by spaces.   A
          backslash  escapes spaces within an option.  The RCSINIT options
          are prepended to  the  argument  lists  of  most  RCS  commands.
          Useful RCSINIT options include -q, -V, -x, and -z.

   RCS_MEM_LIMIT
          Normally,  for  speed,  commands  either memory map or copy into
          memory the RCS file if its size is less than  the  memory-limit,
          currently  defaulting  to  ``unlimited''.   Otherwise (or if the
          initially-tried speedy ways fail), the  commands  fall  back  to
          using standard i/o routines.  You can adjust the memory limit by
          setting RCS_MEM_LIMIT  to  a  numeric  value  lim  (measured  in
          kilobytes).   An  empty  value  is  silently ignored.  As a side
          effect, specifying RCS_MEM_LIMIT inhibits  fall-back  to  slower
          routines.

   TMPDIR Name  of  the  temporary directory.  If not set, the environment
          variables TMP and TEMP are inspected instead and the first value
          found  is  taken;  if  none  of  them  are set, a host-dependent
          default is used, typically /tmp.

DIAGNOSTICS

   The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were successful.

IDENTIFICATION

   Author: Walter F. Tichy.
   Manual Page Revision: 5.9.4; Release Date: 2015-06-21.
   Copyright  2010-2015 Thien-Thi Nguyen.
   Copyright  1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 Paul Eggert.
   Copyright  1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F. Tichy.

SEE ALSO

   ci(1), co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1), rcsmerge(1), rcsfile(5).

   Walter F. Tichy, RCS--A System for Version Control,  Software--Practice
   & Experience 15, 7 (July 1985), 637-654.

   The  full  documentation for RCS is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If
   the info(1) and RCS programs are properly installed at your  site,  the
   command

          info rcs

   should  give  you access to the complete manual.  Additionally, the RCS
   homepage:

          http://www.gnu.org/software/rcs/

   has news and links to the latest release, development site, etc.

BUGS

   The separator for revision ranges in the -r option used to be - instead
   of  :,  but this leads to confusion when symbolic names contain -.  For
   backwards compatibility rlog -r still supports the old - separator, but
   it warns about this obsolete use.





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